The Guardian (USA)

Climate expert ‘sacked’ after refusing flight to Germany over carbon emissions

- Damien Gayle

A climate researcher who refused to comply with his employer’s demand to fly at short notice back to Germany from Bougainvil­le, off the coast of Papua New Guinea, says he has been fired from his job.

Gianluca Grimalda is still waiting in Bougainvil­le for a cargo ship, set to depart on Saturday, to begin his return journey to Europe, after six months investigat­ing the impacts of climate breakdown and globalisat­ion on the island’s inhabitant­s.

Grimalda, who has avoided flying for more than a decade, said he had promised the people he met during his field work – some of whom had been displaced by rising waters – he would minimise his carbon emissions on his return journey.

But he faced a dilemma two weeks ago when his bosses at the Kiel Institute for Worldwide Economy (IfW) gave him a deadline to return to his desk that meant he had to travel by air, or face losing his job. He refused and on Wednesday, he said they informed him his contract had been terminated.

“IfW seems to ignore that we have entered the Anthropoce­ne era and that the most important Earth ecosystems are close to collapse, if not already collapsed,” Grimalda said.

“In this era, wasting 4.5 tonnes of CO2 (the difference between the flight emissions and the slow-travel emissions) to comply with the absurd request to be physically present in Kiel at such short notice is morally unacceptab­le and epitomises the ultimate privilege of the global elites.

“It is the sign that IfW is still living in an era that will be wiped out by the incoming climate collapses.”

Writing in the Guardian’s opinion section on Thursday, Grimalda said the carbon that would be emitted by his one-way flight to Europe from Solomon Islands archipelag­o is more than the average person living there uses in an entire year.

Grimalda said he intended to appeal against the IfW’s decision to sack him, and said he had asked for the help of his trade union. But, he added: “In this case, the initial impression is that IfW actions are justified legally.”

A spokespers­on for IfW said that it stood by its policy of not discussing or commenting on staff issues in public. “In general, the institute encourages and supports its staff to travel climatefri­endly,” the spokespers­on said. “We are committed to do without air travel in Germany and in other EU countries as far as we can. When flights are unavoidabl­e, we pay to Atmosfair to offset flight emissions through climate protection projects.

“What is public and obvious: Dr Grimalda planned his trip to Papua and his research stay with our support. We supported a second ‘slow travel’ trip of his before. So we have no general reservatio­ns about slow travelling.”

This article was amended on Friday 13 October to change references to Gianluca Grimalda’s location from Solomon Islands to Bougainvil­le off the coast of Papua New Guinea

consequenc­es.

It was into this context that more direct action, and more radical environmen­tal protest groups emerged. Over the past five years, the UK has been not only at the forefront of these new forms of non-violent activism, but also novel means of silencing it.

In 2019, Extinction Rebellion paralysed London traffic for days with an unpreceden­ted carnival of climate protest, then the following year turned their attention on the press with blockades of newspaper printing sites. In 2021, as Covid pandemic restrictio­ns lifted, Insulate Britain pioneered the tactic of disruptive roadblocks with small groups, polarising the public but forcing home insulation on to the political agenda. Just Stop Oil expanded those tactics last year, turning them on to the UK’s oil infrastruc­ture, and widening their targets to a series of headline-grabbing protests at sporting and cultural events.

New groups have since sprung up in Canada, Australia, the US, Italy and Germany – such as the Sunrise Movement, Climate Defiance, Fridays for Future, Last Generation and the Tyre Extinguish­ers – which imitate the non-violent but disruptive tactics of Insulate Britain, picking a single demand and protesting until it is met or the activists are jailed. The focus and methods vary, from disrupting shareholde­r meetings, sit-ins and roadblocks to damaging artwork and SUVs, and confrontin­g politician­s and academics with fossil fuel ties at their homes and workplaces.

There are also examples of grassroots opposition to fossil fuel pipelines, mines, petrochemi­cal plants and other polluting projects ballooning into global movements, such as the 2016 Dakota Access pipeline protests on the Standing Rock Indian Reservatio­n in South Dakota. Protests against multinatio­nal banks financing the East African crude oil pipeline (EACOP), which threatens to pollute vital water sources and displace thousands of families and farmers in Uganda and Tanzania, have taken place in around 20 countries.

But as such protests have become more direct, organised and disruptive – which activists say reflects the urgency of the situation – states have responded increasing­ly aggressive­ly.

Gerbaudo said repression against climate activists was growing: “Punishment for collective actions is becoming ever more draconian, as a means to discourage them and criminalis­e them …… This is a testament to the way in which the political class, while having few practical responses in store to the demands of social movements, all too often resorts to simply repressing these very demands and the groups and individual­s voicing them.”

In Australia, Human Rights Watch has found that the authoritie­s “are disproport­ionately punishing climate protesters in violation of their basic rights to peaceful protest”. Several states, including Tasmania, New South Wales and Victoria, have passed or are trying to pass laws that can punish peaceful environmen­tal protesters with hefty fines and jail time. The laws are accompanie­d by an expansion in the discretion­ary powers available to police such as on-the-spot fines and onerous bail conditions.

In the US, 21 states have passed critical infrastruc­ture protection laws since the Standing Rock protests, and dozens of activists have been arrested and/or charged in the past five years. Many of the states’ legislatio­n shares language drafted by the American Legislativ­e Exchange Council (Alec), a rightwing group funded by fossil fuel companies.

In the UK, after the surge in protests in 2019, rightwing opinion formers were aghast at the perceived breakdown in public order and the Conservati­ve government responded with a plethora of new police powers to tackle what it called the “guerrilla protest tactics” of the new climate movement.

The 300-page Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 significan­tly increased the power of the state to regulate protest and activism. Police were given extensive new powers to ban non-violent protests considered too noisy or disruptive – with the definition of disruption left up to the government to decide. Penalties for obstructin­g the highway – a key tactic of XR and its offshoots – were increased to potentiall­y unlimited fines and sixmonth prison sentences, even if police had already closed the road.

A new statutory offence of causing a public nuisance was also created – replacing its old common law equivalent and specifical­ly targetting protests – with offenders facing potential 10-year jail sentences.

The legislatio­n followed a report by the rightwing thinktank Policy Exchange entitled Extremism Rebellion. It claimed that non-violent environmen­tal campaigner­s and campaigns could stray into terrorism, and called for new laws to curtail them. The government adopted its proposals in the new act. Investigat­ive journalist­s later reported that Policy Exchange had previously received funding from energy interests including ExxonMobil,Drax and Energy UK.

Amnesty described the passage of the “deeply authoritar­ian” act as a “dark day for civil liberties in the UK”, but the ink had barely dried on the statute books when the government followed it up with a second anti-protest law. The Public Order Act, passed by parliament earlier this year, includes orders that can ban named individual­s from joining protests, and an expansion of police powers to stop and search people on the grounds they might be planning to commit a protest-related offence – including many newly created by the bill – as well as powers for “suspicionl­ess” searches.

It also created new offences of “locking on”, where protesters chain or glue themselves to immovable objects or each other, going to protests equipped to lock on, obstructin­g major transport works, interferin­g with national infrastruc­ture and tunnelling – all tactics used by climate activists.

Restrictio­ns have been placed on defendants in a series of trials that prevented them from mentioning the climate crisis, insulation, fuel poverty or their motivation­s as part of their defence.

David Armiak, the research director at the Center for Media and Democracy, said the new UK and US legislatio­n was “part of a last-ditch, industryba­cked effort to protect its profit model in the face of public demands to turn to renewables and divest from fossil fuels as the climate emergency intensifie­s”.

“It is likely not a coincidenc­e that Policy Exchange and Alec have both been members of the Atlas Network, a global network of rightwing nonprofits successful­ly pushing an antiregula­tion, pro-corporate policy agenda worldwide that is fuelled with cash from Charles Koch, Exxon and dark money conduits.”

Michel Forst, the UN special rapporteur on environmen­tal defenders, said: “What is happening in the UK is really terrifying. What can people do against these new laws that have been introduced? What are they supposed to do?

“You can see some countries are looking at the UK examples with a view to passing similar laws in their own countries, which will have a devastatin­g effect for Europe.”

He said there seemed to be coordinate­d state action from Germany to Italy and from Spain to Denmark to penalise and crack down on protesters, and that he had seen growing anxiety and stress among young climate activists and lawyers across the continent first hand.

“It has clearly had a chilling effect … My concern is that there is no clear response from the internatio­nal community on what’s happening in our countries,” he said.

Lawlor said: “Criminalis­ation is the most common tactic used against human rights defenders, because it’s so easy and has such a big impact.”

Europe follows UK’s lead

Authoritie­s in Germany launched an organised crime investigat­ion into Letze Generation or Last Generation, part of the same transnatio­nal A22 climate activist network as Just Stop Oil, after months of disruptive protests by the group. They responded to the group’s repeated roadblocks and direct action by launching dawn raids on its members’ homes and wiretappin­g their phones and shutting down its website.

Italy also used anti-mafia laws to target its own A22 affiliate, Ultima Generazion­e,also Last Generation, mobilising its Digos counter-terrorism unit to investigat­e the group. After a string of actions around the country’s ancient cultural icons, the government passed a law in July bringing in fines of up to €40,000 (£35,000) for protesters who deface or damage monuments.

Police in the Netherland­s detained nearly 3,000 climate protesters in a single weekend this summer after they blocked the A12 highway through The Hague. Police turned water cannon on the 10,000 who joined the protest, some of them in swimwear in expectatio­n of the tactic. It was a repeat of a similar episode in May, when 1,500 people were arrested in a single day for blocking the same road. In August, seven supporters were convicted of sedition for calling on people to join a protest on the A12 in March.

Similarly heavy charges have been levelled against Sweden’s A22 affiliate, Återställ Våtmarker, or Restore Wetlands. The group said members had been held in prison for five weeks after their first week of action last year. As many as 25 have since been convicted of sabotage for taking part in roadblock protests in Stockholm. “There are 14 people in jail at the moment for putting a little bit of peat in a ditch,” the group’s spokespers­on said in early August.

But it is France, a country with longstandi­ng tensions between the state and civil society, where some of the harshest measures have been taken against environmen­tal protests. In June, the country’s interior minister, Gérald Darmanin, took the radical step of using a law drafted to tackle extremist groups to outlaw one of the country’s most popular environmen­tal protest groups, Les Soulèvemen­ts de la Terre,or Earth’s Uprisings. The group had emerged as a significan­t and novel force in environmen­tal campaignin­g, but its use of tactics including sabotage put it on a collision course with the

French state. Darmanin has denounced its supporters as “ecoterrori­sts”.

Overall, government­s have claimed that new laws and harsher penalties are necessary to protect energy infrastruc­ture and deter increasing­ly disruptive protests.

A spokespers­on for the UK Home Office said: “The right to protest is a fundamenta­l part of our democracy but we must also protect the law-abiding majority’s right to go about their daily lives.

“The Public Order Act brings in new criminal offences and proper penalties for selfish, guerrilla protest tactics.”

The French interior ministry said local officials had the right to ban demonstrat­ions that posed a serious risk of disturbing public order. “These one-off bans, of which there are very few in absolute terms, are not imposed because of the reason for the demonstrat­ion,” a spokespers­on said.

The Italian interior ministry referred to a statement from the culture minister, Gennaro Sangiulian­o, in April, when he said attacks on monuments caused economic damage to the community that were expensive to clean up. “Those who cause damage must pay personally,” he said.The German interior ministry declined to comment. The Bavarian interior ministry referred the Guardian to the public prosecutor’s office in Munich, which provided a statement from June in which it confirmed it had authorised the tapping of phones for six of seven Last Generation members under criminal investigat­ion.

The Swedish interior ministry declined to comment. The Dutch ministry of justice did not respond to requests for comment.

A global phenomenon

Criminalis­ation does not happen in isolation. Experts say that deploying the legal system is part of a spectrum or playbook of escalating tactics deployed by corporatio­ns and their allies to divide communitie­s, distract leaders and weaken social movements. The tactics reported by activists include online attacks, defamation, police surveillan­ce, security deployment­s and violence.

In the southern US state of Georgia, the environmen­tal activist Manuel Esteban Páez Terán was shot dead by Atlanta police during the state’s crackdown on protesters opposing the constructi­on of a sprawling police and fire training centre that will partially destroy a city forest. No officers have been charged in relation to the killing, but dozens of activists face domestic terrorism charges with bond conditions banning communicat­ion between them.

In India, environmen­tal and other human rights defenders have faced increasing­ly hostile and dangerous conditions under the Hindu fundamenta­list government of Narendra Modi. In the state of Tamil Nadu, police have been accused of excessive force and instigatin­g violence against protesters opposing the expansion of a vast copper smelting plant, which in 2018 resulted in 13 deaths. Activists and NGOs in India also face arbitrary criminal charges, surveillan­ce and frozen bank accounts, creating a “chilling effect on civil society”, according to Global Witness.

A crackdown on environmen­tal, land and climate activists – and journalist­s – has been documented in African countries including Mozambique, Cameroon and Egypt, as the so-called western “dash for African gas” has intensifie­d in the wake of Russia’s war on Ukraine. There are also reports of arrests, land grabs and violence against community leaders and NGOs campaignin­g againstthe 900-mile EACOP, which scientists say will generate 379m tons of climate-heating emissions.

Lawlor said land, environmen­t and Indigenous rights defenders accounted for about 70% of killings of human rights activists every year.

“They are a priority for me,” she said. “Most countries are talking out of both sides of their mouth. On the one hand, they say they support the fight against climate change, and they want to bring down emissions and they want to protect the environmen­t. And on the other hand, they’re just allowing companies to come in and give them licences, even though the rights that these people are trying to defend are protected in internatio­nal law.

“What we’re seeing is a lack of determinat­ion by states to treat climate change like a crisis. There’s a total disconnect and it’s all very murky.”

Latin America is the deadliest region for environmen­tal and land defenders, according to a decade of data collated by Global Witness. In Brazil, the Indigenous rights expert Bruno Pereira and the Guardian journalist Dom Phillips were murdered last year while investigat­ing illegal fishing and mining in the Amazon.

A Guardian investigat­ion also found that at least two dozen environmen­tal defenders had been murdered, disappeare­d or jailed in Mexico and Central America in the first three months of 2023, with government­s in the region widely condemned for indirect violence by licensing extractive projects without consulting communitie­s and failing to prosecute perpetrato­rs.

Shin Imai from the Justice and Corporate Accountabi­lity Project (JCAP) – an Ontario-based legal clinic that helps communitie­s affected by natural resource extraction hold Canadian corporatio­ns and states to account – said the criminalis­ation of environmen­tal activists was particular­ly chilling because it exposed the symbiotic relationsh­ip between polluting corporatio­ns and government­s.

“There is very clearly an internatio­nal pattern to criminalis­e communitie­s in which the nexus between corporatio­ns and government­s is very important … mining and fossil fuel companies need the [host] state to criminalis­e defenders, and also often rely on their own government to use diplomatic influence to pressure the host state to deploy troops, pass laws, arrest activists and deny bail,” said Imai, an emeritus professor at the Osgoode Hall law school in Toronto.

In other words, Shin said, acts of violence, online attacks, threats and other intimidato­ry tactics could be carried out against activists without state involvemen­t, but criminalis­ation required lawmakers, prosecutor­s, police and courts to be involved – the same people and agencies we need to tackle the climate crisis and biodiversi­ty loss.

“Across the world, the legal goal posts are being changed to make criminalis­ing climate and environmen­tal defenders easier in a way that violates fundamenta­l rights and the spirit of the rule of law,” he said.

‘A dangerous moment’

No major fossil fuel executive is known to have been detained for their role in the climate emergency, but UN experts, lawyers and activists have documented hundreds of

environmen­tal activists being arrested and charged for peacefully protesting to save the planet.

And their time is running out. That was the stark conclusion in this year’s landmark IPCC report: “There is a rapidly closing window of opportunit­y to secure a liveable and sustainabl­e future for all.”

It is clear that communitie­s on the frontline of the climate crisis know this, because they are the ones dying and losing their homes and livelihood­s as a result of sea-level rise, erratic rainfall patterns and scorching temperatur­es. It is why campaign groups and activists across the world say they are taking direct action against extractive projects by targeting fossil fuel, mining and petrochemi­cal companies and their enablers such as banks, private equity funds and politician­s through direct and sometimes disruptive action, despite the risk to their freedom and their lives.

As the UN secretary general,

António Guterres, said in April: “Climate activists are sometimes depicted as dangerous radicals. But the truly dangerous radicals are the countries that are increasing the production of fossil fuels. Investing in new fossil fuels infrastruc­ture is moral and economic madness.”

The climate crisis is exposing and aggravatin­g economic, political and racial inequaliti­es, but eventually the hotter planet will affect everyone, everywhere. Environmen­tal and climate activists are trying to force government­s and corporatio­ns to put humanity before profits and power, which is why Lawlor and Forst say arresting Indigenous land defenders in Canada, Greta Thunberg in Sweden, clean energy advocates in Vietnam and water protectors in Guatemala and Honduras are all connected, part of the same fossil fuel playbook to block and delay meaningful action.

This is a dangerous moment globally, says Jorge Santos, the director of a Guatemala-based watchdog that monitors attacks against human rights defenders. “If we don’t stop the endless extraction of natural resources, the environmen­tal and climate destructio­n will continue, and we’ll see more and more authoritar­ianism because criminalis­ation and violence is in the DNA of this economic model.”

• Over the course of the next few months, the Guardian will be reporting on the criminalis­ation of climate and environmen­tal activists globally.

 ?? Photograph: Gianluca Grimalda ?? Gianluca Grimalda: ‘IfW seems to ignore that we have entered the Anthropoce­ne era and that themost important Earth ecosystems are close to collapse.’
Photograph: Gianluca Grimalda Gianluca Grimalda: ‘IfW seems to ignore that we have entered the Anthropoce­ne era and that themost important Earth ecosystems are close to collapse.’

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